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A87520 The vvorks of that grave and learned lavvyer Iudge Ienkins, prisoner in Newgate. Upon divers statutes, concerning the liberty, and freedome of the subject. With a perfect table thereto annexed. Jenkins, David, 1582-1663. 1648 (1648) Wing J574; Thomason E1154_2; ESTC R20801 80,714 206

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themselves and the people with the word Parliament without the King and with the Covenant whereas they know they are no Parliament without His Majesty And that English men throwout the Kingdome should swear a Covenant to preserve the reformed Religion of Scotland in Doctrine Worship Discipline and Government which they do no more know than the Doctrine Worship Discipline and Government of Prester John in Aethiopia if they consider it they cannot but discerne that this is a high desperate and impious madnesse Be wise in time Without the King and the Lawes you will never have one hour of safety for your Persons Wives Children or Estates Be good to your selves and to your posterities apply your selves to be capable of an Act of Oblivion and of a generall Pardon and to be able and willing to pay the Souldiery and to allow a reasonable liberty for mens consciences and God will blesse your endeavours and the people to whom you are now very hatefull will have you in better estimation The third Quaere is thus answered You resemble the Army to Jack Cade and his complices and you cite the Act of Parliament of 31. Hen. 6. cap. 1. And that it may appear who acts the part of Jack Cade you and that party in the two Houses or the Army I think it necessary to set down the said Act in words at length as followeth First VVhereas the most abominable Tyrant horrible odious arrant false Traytor John Cade calling and nameing himself sometime Mortimer sometime Capt. of Kent which name fame acts and feates are to be removed out of the speech and minds of every faithfull Christian man perpetually falsly and tralterously purposing and imagining the perpetuall destruction of the Kings said Person finall subversion of this Realm taking upon him Royall Power and gathering to him the Kings people in great numbers by false subtile imagined language and seditiously making a stirring Rebellion Insurrection under colour of Iustice for Reformation of the Lawes of the said King robbing stealing and spoyling great part of his faithfull people Our said Soveraigne Lord the King considering the premises with many other which were more odious to remember by the advice and consent of the Lords aforesaid at the request of the said Commons and by authority aforesaid hath Ordained and established that the said John Cade shall be reputed had named and declared a false Trayper to enr Soveraigne Lord the King and that all his tyranny acts feats and false opinions shall be voyded abated nulled destroyed and put out of remembrance for ever and that all Indictments and all things depending thereof had and made under to power of Tyranuy shall be likewise void anuulled abated repealed and holden for none and that the blood of none of them be thereof defiled nor corrupted but by the Authority of the said Parliament clearly declared for ever and that all Indictments in times coming in like case under power of Tyranny Rebellion and Stirring had shall be of no Record nor effect but void in Law and all the petitions delivered to the said King in his last Parliament holden at VVestm Nov 6 in the 29. of his r●igne against his mind by him not agreed shall be taken and put in oblivion out of remembrance undone voided a●ulled and destroyed for ever as a thing purposed against God and Conscience and against his Royall Estate and preeminence and also dishonourable and unreasonable Now we are to examine who hath trod in the steps of Iack Cade you and the present prevailing party of both Houses tooke upon them and do take all the Royall power in all things so did Iack Cade as appeares by the said Act the Army do not so They who imprison the King purpose to destroy his person our imprisoned Kings aswaies * Edward 1. Henry 6 Richard 2. fared so Iack Cade did likewise so purpose The said party in the two Houses made a stirring under colour of Instice for reformation of the Lawes so did Iac Cade The Army do not so but desire that the Lawes should be observed lack Cade levied war against the King The Army preserves Him Iack Cade dyed a Declared Traitor to his Soveraign Lord the King this army might have lived to have the glorious true Honor of being restorers of their King Simon Sudbury Archbishop of Canterbury was murthered by Jack Straw William Laud Archbishop of Canterbury was likewise murthered by that party of the two Houses 25 Ed. 3 4.28 Ed. 3.3 Petition of Right for that an Ordinance hy Law cannot take away any mans life and his life was taken away by an Ordinance of the two Houses the army had no hand in it Many misted by Iack Straw perceiving his Trayterous purposes fell from him and as that was lawfull just and honourable so it is for this Army to adhere to their naturall King and so endeavour to settle the Kingdome again in the just Lawes and Liberties thereof London did then right worthily adhere to the King and the Laws and not to Jack Straw and his specious pretences and it is hoped they will now so do By this it appeares that the Gentlemans Discourse touching Iack Cade fastens altogether on his party and cleareth the Army To the IV. which is resolved thus The Arreares of the Army howbeit it is the least thing they look after yet being not paid them it is by the Law of the Land a sufficient cause to leave and desert that party in the Houses a person who serves in any kinde and is not paid his Wages the desertion of that service is warrantable by the Lawes of the Land You say the Houses will reforme all things when the Army doth disband Fitz. N B 159 9 Ed. 4 20.38 H. 6 27 23 Eliz. Dier 369. Who will believe it Will any beleive that the setling of the Presbytery will do it Will any believe that his Majesty will passe the propositions sent to Him to Newcastle Will any man believe that this Kingdome will ever be quiet without his Majesty and the ancient and just Lawes Can the Members of the Army conceive any of them to be safe in any thing without a pardon from his Majesty Have they not seen some of their fellowes hanged before their eyes for actions done as Soldiers Shall the Kingdom have no acount of the many Millions received of the publique Money Will the Members of the Houses accuse themselves Shall private and publique Debts be never paid Shall the Kingdome lie ever under burthens of oppression and Tyranny There is no visible way to remedy all these Enormities but the power of the Army To the V. wich is solved thus The Kingdom hath better assurance of Reformation from the Army than from the Houses for that in their Military way they have been just faithfull and honourable they have kept their words That party of the Houses have been constant to nothing but in dividing the publique Treasure among themselves
Soveraigne Lord at all seasons when need shall be Here the supreame power in the time of Parliament by both Houses is declared to belong to the King At the beginning of every Parliament all Armes are 7. Ed. 2.4 pars instit 14. or ought to be forbidden to be borne in London Westminster or the Subburbs This condemnes the multitudes comming to Westminster and the Guards of armed men All who held by Knights service 1 Edw. 2. de Militibus and had twenty pounds per annum were distraynable ad Arma militaria suscipienda This agrees with the Records of ancient time continued constantly in all Kings times but at this Parliament 3. November 1640. The King out of his grace discharged this duty which proves that the power of warre and preparation thereto belongs not to the two Houses but only to the King The two Spencers in Edw. 2. Edw. 3. Ca●vins Case Cook●e 7. fol. 11. time hatched to cover their Treason this damnable and damned opinion viz That Ligeance was more by reason of the Kings politick capacity then of his person upon which they inferred these execrable and detestable consequences First if the King demeaned not himselfe by reason in the right of his Crowne his Lieges are bound by Oath to remove him Secondly seeing the King could not be removed by suit of Law it was to be done by force Thirdly that his Lieges be bound to governe in default of him All which tenets were condemned by two Parliaments the one called exilium Hugonis in Ed. 2. time the other by 1. Edw. 3. cap. 2. All which Articles against the Spencers are confirmed by this last Statute the Artiles are extant in the booke called vetera Statuta The separation of the Kings person from his power is the principall Article condemned and yet all these three damnable detestable and execrable consequents are the grounds whereupon this present time relies and the principles whereupon the two houses found their cause The Villeine of a Lord in the presence of the King cannot be seized ●●●nden com 322. ●y ass pl. 49 for the presence of the King is a protection for that time to him This shewes what reverence the Law gives to the person of a King Regis 33 Ed. 3. ●yde de roy 203 Fitz 30 H. 7.16 sacro oleo uncti sunt capa●es spiritualis jurisdictionis But the two Houses were never held capable of that power Rex est persona mixta cum sacerdote ha●et Ecclesiasticam spiritualem jurisdictionem This shewes the Kings power in Ecclesiasticall Causes The Lands of the King is called in Law Patromoni●n sacrum Com. Sur. Littl Sect. 4. The Houses should not have meddled with that sacred Patromony 3 Ed. 3.19 The King hath no Peere in his Land and cannot be judged Ergo the two Houses are not above him The Parliament 15. Ed. 3. was repealed for that is was against the Kings Lawes and prerogative 4 part instit● fol. 25. This shewes cleerely the Propositions sent to Newcastle ought not to have beene presented to his Majesty For that they are contrary to the Lawes and his Prerogative The Lords and Commons cannot assent in Parliament to any thing that tends to the dis-inherifion of the King and his Crowne 4 Part Cooke in●●it fol. 14. 42. E. 3. to which they are sworne This condemnes the said Propositions likewise To depose the King Parliamen● Rol. num 7. Rex 〈◊〉 suetud● Par●amenti to imprison him untill he assent to certaine dedemands a warre to alter the Religion established by Law or any other Law or to remove Councellors to hold a Castle or Fort against the King are offences against that Law declared to be treason by the resolution herein after mentioned by that Law men are bound to ayd the King when warre is levied against him in his Realme 25 Ed. 3. cap. 2. King in his Statute must be intended in his naturall body and person that only can dye for to compasse his death and declare it by overt Act is declared thereby treason to incounter in fight such as come to ayd the King in his warres is treason Compassing of the Q●●ens death of the Kings Eldest Sonne to coyne his money to counterfeit his Great-Seale to levy Warre against him to adhere to such as shall so doe are declared by that Act to be high treason This Statute cannot referre to the King in his politique capacity but to his naturall which is inseperable from the politick for a body politick can have neither Wife 〈◊〉 13. nor Childe nor levy Warre nor doe any Act but by the operation of the naturall body A Corporation or body politick hath no soule or life but is a fiction of the Law and the Statute meant not ●●ctitious persons but the body naturall conjoned with the politique which are inseperable The clause in that Act that no man should sue for grace or pardon for any offence condemned or forfeiture given by that Act 21 Ed. 4.14 ● 2.11 an was repealed by a subsequent Act in 21. R. ● holden unreasonable without example and against the Law and custome of the Parliament This condemnes the Proposition for disabling the King to Pardon 4 pars instit fol. 42. 4. Pars instit fol. 42. The Act of 11. R. 2. so much urged by the other side was an Act to which the King consented and so a perfect Act yet Note the Army then about the Towne Note that that Law is a-against private persons and by the 3. cap. thereof the treasons there declared are declared to be new treasons made by that Act and not to be drawne to example it was abrogated 21. R. 2. and revived by an usurper 1 H. 4. to please the people and by the tenth chap. thereof enacts that nothing shall be treason but what is declared by 25. Ed. 3. 16. Ed. cap. 5.16 R. 2. cap. 5. H. 4. The Regality of the Crowne of England is immediately subject to God and to none other Plaine words shewing where the supreame power is The Commission of Array is in force and no other Commission Rot. Parlm 5. H. 4. numb 24. an Act not printed this Act was repealed by 4. and 5. P. M cap. 2. this repealed by the Act of 1 Iacobi and so it is of force at this day for the repealing Statute is repealed 4. pars institu● fol. 51. 125 published fithence this Parliament by the desire of the house of Commons their Order is printed in the last leafe of the commentaries upon Magna Charta Sir Edward Cooke A booke alowed by Sir Na Brent called the reason of the War fol. 65. by their party is holden for the Oracle of the Law who wrote the said fourth part in a calme and quiet time and I may say when there was no need to defend the authority of the Commission of Array For that objection that that Commission leaves power to the
will not come to them and yet the King desires to come but they wil not suffer him but keepe him prisoner at Holmby so well doe their Actions and Oathes agree 5. They sweare now King Charies is their only and supreame Governor but with a resolution at the time of the Oath taking and before and after that he shall not be only or supreame Governour or only and supreame but not any Governour at all For there is no point of Government but for some yeares past they have taken to themselves and used his name only to abuse and deceive the people 6. That this virtuall power is a meere fiction their Propositions sent to Oxford to Neweastle to be signed by the King doe prove it so What needs this adoe if they have the virtuall Power with them at Wistminster 7. To affirme that the Kings power which is the vertue they talke of is separable from his person is High Treason by the Law of the Land which is so declared by that learned man of the Law Sir Edward Cocke so much magnified by this present Parliament who in the 7 part of his Reports in Calving case fol. 11 saith thus In the reigne of Edward the second the Supencers the Father and Sonne to cover the Treason hat hed in their hearts invented this damnable and damned opinion that homage and Oath of Legeance was more by reason of the I Kings Crowne that is of his potitick capacity theu by reason of ohe person of the King upon which ●●inion they inferred three execra●le and detestable consequences h. If the King to not demeaue himselfe by reason in the right of his Crowne his Lieges are bound ●y Oath to remove the King 2 seeing that the King ●ould not be retormed by ●nte of Law that ought so be dene per aspertes that is by orce 3. That his Lieges be beund to governe in ●yde of him and in default of him all which w●re condemned by two Parliaments one in the raigue of Edw. 2. called exilium Hugonis le Spencer and the other in anno 1. Edw 3 cap. 2. And that the naturall body and politick maks one indivisible body that these two bodies incorporate in one person make one body and not divers is resolved as the Law of Eng. 4 Ed 3 Ploydon Com. fol. 213 by Sir Co bet Catlin L. Chiefe Justice of Eng. Sir I●mes D●er L. Chief Justice of the Common pleas the L. Sanders L. Chief Baron of the Exche●ner by the rest of the Judges viz. Justice Restall Justice Browne Justice Corbet Justice weston Baron Frevyl● Carus and Pow●rel Sergeant to the Queene Gerrard Auturny Generall Carell Atturney of the Dutchy P●owdon the learnedest man of that age in the knowledge of the Law and Customes of the Realme 8. The Law in all ages without any controversie is and hath been that no Act of Parliament bindes the Subjects of the Land without the assent of the King ● H●● 3 Mogn Charta So in every Age till this d●y and in every Kings time as appeares by the Acts in Print 1 part of the Iustit Sect. 234. 〈◊〉 fine where many of the Law-Bookes are ●iied 7 Hen. 7.14.12 of Hen. 7.20 either for Person Lauds Goods or Fame No man can shew any sillable letter or line to the contrary in the bookes of the Law or printed Acts of Parliament in any age in this Land If the virtuall power be in the Houses there needs no assent of the Kings The stiles of the Acts printed from 9 Hen. 3. to 1 Hen. 7. were either The King ordaines at his Parliament c. or the King ordaineth by the adv●ee of his Prelates and Bar●●rs and at the humble Petition of the Commons c. In Hen. 7. his time the Stile altered and hath fithence continued thus It is o●dained by the Kings Majesty and the Lords spirituall and temporall and Commons in this present Parliament assembled So that alwayes the Assent of the King giveth the life to all as the soule to the body and therefore our Law bookes call the King the Fountaine of Justice and the life of the Law 9. 2 Han. 4 Cap 22 4 pars instit 42. Mr. ●●in in his Treatise of the great Seal fol. 17.27 Hen. 8 Chap. 24. Mercy as well as Justice belongs by the Law of the Land onely to the King This is confessed by Mr. Pryn and it is so without any question The King can onely pardon and never more cause to have sufficient pardons then in such troublesome times as these and God send us pardons and peace None can give any pardon but the King by the Law of the Land The whole and sole power of pardoning Treasons and Felonies belongs to the King are the words of the Law and it is a delusion to take it from any other and utterly invalid 27. Hen. 8. c. 24. 10. Queene Elizabeth summoned her first Parliament to bee held the 23. of Jan. in the first yeare of her Majesties Raigne The Lords and commons assembled by force of the same Writ the 21 day the Queen fell sick and could not appeare in her person in Parliament that day and therefore prorogued it untill the 25 of the same Month of January Resolved by all the Judges of England that the Parliament began not the day of the returne of the Writ 3 of Eliz. Dier 2●3 viz. the 23. of January when the Lords and Commons appeared but the 25 of the said Moneth when the Queene came in person which sheweth evidently that this virtuall presence is a meere deluding fiction that hath no ground in Law reason or sence They have the King now a prisoner at Holmby with guards upon him and yet they governe by the virtuall power of their prisoner These are some few of the causes and reasons which moved me to deliver that paper to Mr. Corbet which I am ready to justifie with my life and should hold it a great honour to dye for the honourable and holy Lawes of the Land that which will save this Land from destruction is an Act of Oblivion and his Majesties gracious generall pardon the Souldiers their Arrears and euery man his own and truth and Peace established in the Land and a favourable regard had to the satisfaction of tender Consciences April 29. 1547. David Ienkins THE ARMIES INDEMNITY WITH ADDITION Together with a DECLARATION SHEWING How every Subject of ENGLAND ought to be tried for Treasons Felonies and all other Capital Crimes as is set down in the Lawes of the LAND By DAVID IENKINS now Prisoner in the Tower of London Printed in the Yeare 1648. The Armies Imdemnity c. UPon the publishing of the Ordinance of the 22 of May last for the Indemnity of the Army certaine Gentlemen well affected to the peace of the Kingdome and safety of the Army desired mee to set down in writing whether by the Law of the Land the said Ordinance did secure them from danger as to
England and having many adherents And that Statute to that end affirmes no such power in the two Houses which is the question but in Queene Elizabeth and the two Houses which makes against the pretence of this time Master Prynne fol. 104 of his booke intituled the Parliaments supreme power c. Objecting the Statute of the first of Queens Elizabeth and his owne Oath that the King is the onely supreame Goverhour of this Realme Answers The Parliament is the supreme power and the King supreme Governour And yet there he allowes him a Nega●ive Voyce and fol. 107. confesseth that Acts of Parliament translated the Crowne from the right Heires at Common-Law to others who had no good Title then the Parlimentary Title makes not the King so powerfull in truth that it escapes from a man unawares To make a distinction betweene supreame Governour and supreame power is very strange for who can governe without power The King assembles the Parliament by his Writ adjournes Vide Speep 645.4 par Instit 27. 2. prorogues and dissolves the Parliament by the Law at his pleasure as is evident by constant practise the House of Commons never sate after an adjournement of the Parliament by the Kings Command Where is the supreame power The King by his Oath is bound to deny no man right 18 Ob. much lesse the Parliament to agree to all just and necessary Lawes proposed by them to the King This is the substance of the discourse against the Kings Negative Voyce The King is so hound as is set downe in the Objection Sol. but who shall judge whether the Bill proposed be just and necessary For all that they do propose are so pretended and carried in either House sometimes by one or two Voyces or some sew as aforesaid and certainly it hath been shewen the King his Counsell of State his Judges Sergeants Attorney Sollicitor and twelve Masters of the Chancery can better judge of them then two or three or few more Mr. Prynne fol. 45. In his Booke of the Parliaments interest to nominate Prnvy Councellors calleth the opinion of the Spencers to divide the Person of the King from his Crowne Calvins case 7 pars fol. ●1 a stringe opinion and cites Calvins Case but leaves out the conclusions therein mentioned fol. 11. Master Prynne saith there But let this opinion be what it will without the Kings Grace and Pardon it will goe very farre and two Acts of Parliament there mentioned are beyond an opinion And in his Book of the opening of the Great Seale fol. 17. The Parliament hath no jurisdiction to use the Grear Seale for Pardons Generall or Particular Where is the supreme power then Mr. 19. Ob. Prynnes opening of the Seale pag. 19. saith the Noblemen and State the day after the Funerall of King Henry the third King Edward the first his Sonne being in the Holy Land made a new Great Seale and Keepers of the same And in Henry the sixts time in the first yeare of his Reigne the like was done in Parliament A facto all jus Sol. is no good Argument for than in Edward the firsts time it was no Parliament for King Henry the third was dead which dissolyed the Parliament if called in his time and it could be no Parliament of Edward the firsts time for no Writ issued to summon a Parliament in his Name nor could issue but under that New Seale it was so suddainely done after● Henry the thirds death King Edward the first being then in the Holy Land it was the first yeare of his Reigne and no Parliament was held that yeare nor the second yeare of his Reigne The first Parliament that was in his Reigne was in the third yeare of his Reigne as appeares by the printed Acts Also the making of that Seale was by some Lords then present What hand had the Commons in it Concerning the Seale made in Henry the sixths time the Protector was vice-Roy according to the course of Law and so the making of that Seale was by the Protector in the Kings name and that Protector Humphrey Duke of Gloucester as Protectour in the Kings Name summoned that Parliament and was Protector made by the Lords and not in Parliament as appeareth plainely for that Parliament was in the first of Henry the sixth and the first holden in his time and power given by Commission to the said Duke then Protector to summon that Parliament Prynne ibid. fol. 19. But the new counterfeit Seale was made when the King was at Oxford in his owne Kingdome and not in the holy Land Mr. 20 Ob. Prynne in his Booke of the two Houses power to impose Taxes restraines Malignants against any Habea● Corpus c. saith that the Parliament is above Magna Charta and fol. 15. ibid. The Parliament hath power over Magna Charta to repeale the same when there is cause This Argument supposeth that they have the Kings power Sol. which hath appeared formerly they have not But suppose they had Magna Charta containes many Morall Lawes which by the Law of the Land a Parliament cannot alter 21 H. 7.2 D. and Student 2 Dialogue For example it saith cap. 11. Justice shall not be sold delayed nor denyed to any man but by this Argument the Parliament may make Law to delay deny and to sell Justice which surely is a very ill position to maintaine What they would have doth now by the Propositions sent to Newcastie to his Majesty appeare whereby they would have him divest himselfe and settle in them all his Kingly power by Sea and Land and of themselves to have power without him to lay upon the people of this Land what taxes they thinke meet to abolish the Common prayer-booke to abolish Episcopacie and to introduce a Church Government not yet agreed but such as they shall agree on His Majesty finding a prevailing party in both Houses to steere this course and being chased away with Tumults from London leaves the Houses for these Reasons viz. First because to alter the Government for Religion is against the Kings Oath Secondly against their Oaths For every of them hath sworne in this Parliament That His Majesty is the onely supreme Governour in all Causes Ecclesiasticall and over all persons Thirdly this course is against Magna Charta the 1. Chap. and the last Salve sint Episcopis omnes liber tales sue Confirmed by thirty two Acts of Parliament and in the two and fortieth of Edward the third the first Chapter enacts if any Statute be made to the contrary it shall be holden for none and so it is for judgements at Law in the 25 of Edward the 1. chap. 1.2 The great Charter is declared to be the Common Law of the Land Fourthly they endeavout to take away by their Propositions the Government of Bishops which is as ancient as Christianity in this Land and the Books of Common prayet settled by five Acts of Parliament and compiled by
the matters therein mentioned For whose satisfaction in a businesse wherein the lives and fortunes of so many men were concerned and the peace of the Kingdom involved I conceived I was bound in duty and conscience faithfully and truly to set down what the Law of the Land therein is which accordingly I have with all sincerity expressed in this following discourse The danger of the Armie by the Law of the Land is apparent to all men 25 ●d 3. c. 21. 2 R. 2. c. 3. ● H. 4. c. 10. 1 2. Th. Mary c. 10. It is high Treason by the Law of the Land to leavy warre against the King to compasse or imagine his death or the death of his Queene or of his eldest Sonne to counterfeit his Money or his great Seale They are the very words of the Law Other Treasons then are specified in that Act are declared to be no Treasons untill the King and his Parliament shall declare otherwise 3 Pars inst p. 22. 2 pars instit pag. 47 48. 4 pars insti● p. 23.48.29 3 pars instit cap. Treason p. 9 10 12. they are the very words of the Law King and Commons King and Lords Commons and Lords cannot declare any other thing to be Treason than there is declared as appeares by the Lord Cook in the places cited in the Margin A Law book published by order of the House of Comōns this Parliament as appears in the last leafe of the 2. part of the Institutes published likewise by their Order The Resolutions of all the Iudges of England upon the said Statute of the 25 Edward 3. 〈◊〉 5. Iohn the Sollicitor in his speech upon the Araignment of the Flarle of Strafford Printed by order of the House of Commons .7 13. as appeares in the said third part of the Institutes Chap. High-Treason have been that to imprison the King untill hee agree to certaine demands is High-Treason to seize his Ports Forts Magazine for Warre are High Treason to alter the Lawes is High Treason The word King in the Statute of 25 Edw. 3. c. p. 2. must be understood of the Kings naturall person for that person can only die have a Wife have a Son or be imprisoned The Priviledge of Parliament protects no man from treason or felony 4 pars insti c. Parl. p. 25● howbeit he be a Member much lesse can they protect others Those who cannot protect themselves have no colour to make Ordinances to protect others who are no Members The Statute of 11 Hen. 7. c. 1. doth by expresse words free all persons who adhere to the King 11 H. 7. c. 1. The Army by an Act of Indemnity free themselyes from all those dangers Stamfo d. l. 2. fol. 99. 18 Ed. 3. Statutes at larg 144. 20 Ed. 3. c. 1. 11 R●● 2. c. 10. 4 pars instit pag. 23.48.29 which an Ordinance can no more do than repealé all the Lawes of the Land the whole and sole power by Law to pardon all Treasons Felonies c. being solely and wholly in the King as is cleared by the Statute of 27 H. 8. c. 24. and the Law of the Land in all times Having shewed the danger of the Army by the Law of the Land next consider th● Ordinance of the Lords and Commons published the 22 of May last for their Indemnity by the ensuing discourse it doth appeare they have no Indemnity at all thereby The Indemnity proposed by the Ordinance is for an Act done by the authority of the Parl or for the service or benefit thereof and that the Judges and all other Ministers of Justice shall allow thereof This Ordinance cannot secure the Army for these reasons 1. Their Judges are sworne to doe justice according to the Law of the Land 3 Pars inst p. 21. 2 pars inst 47.48 1 pars inst 19● Princes case 8 reports and therefore the Judges must be forsworne men if they obey it because an Ordinance of both Houses is no Law of the Land and no man can believe they will perjure themselves so palpably and visibly in the eye of the World 2. All tryals for treasons felonies robberies Magna Charta cap. 19. 25 Ed. 3. c. 4. 28 H. 3. c. 3. 37 Ed. 3. c. 42 Ed. 3. c. 3. and such like capitall offences are by the Law of the Land to be by indictment of a Jury appointed out of the Neighbourhood where the offence was done there is no common Jury-man but understands what the Law is in these cases as well as the best Lawyers and the Law makes the Jury Judges of the fact Doclaration of the Army presented at Walden and printed by the appointment of the Officers subscribed whereby the souldier is left to their mercy whom he hath offended as some of them have lately had wofull experience and thereupon doe rightly apprehend their danger Now no man can think that the Jurors will perjure themselves to acquit the souldiers for robbing and plundring of the Countryes and thereby utterly destroy their own Rights and Properties 3. If the Judges conceive as they may that the taking of other mens horses or goods is not by the Authority of Parliament or for the service and benefit thereof the souldier dies for it they may say to steale or rob any man of his goods is not for the Parliaments service but against it which was alwayes the sense of the people and doubtlesse the Jurors will not think otherwise 4. This Ordinance is restrained to the authority 4 Pars inst p. 1. 3 pars inst p. 22. 1 pars inst p. 1. 28 H. 8. f. i● Dier 38 H. 8. fol. 60. 12 H. 7. 20. 1 pars instit 159. Princes case 8 Reports service or benefit of the Parliament the Lords and Commons make no more a Parliament by the Law of the Land than a body without a head makes a man for a Parliament is a body composed of a King their head the Lords and Commons the Members All three together make one body and that is the Parl. and no other and the Iudges may ought and I believe wil according to their oathes proceed as not bound at all by this Ordinance For it is restrained to the authority of Parliam service or benefit thereof whereas the two Houses are not the Pa●l but onely parts thereof and by the abuse and misunderstanding of this word Parliament they have miserably deceived the people 5. This Ordinance is against their Ordiinance which expressly prohibits plundring 28 Aug. 1642. Col. of Ord. first part 565.592.605 severall Ordinances and so there is one Ordinance against another whereby their Judges have an out let to proceed on the one or the other and thereby the Army hath no manner of security 6. The word Parliament is a French word howbeit such Assemblies were before the Norman Conquest heere and signifies in that language to consult and treat 1 Pars inst 109. 1 pars
Soueraign Lord calling to remembrance the duty of Allegiance of his Subjects of this his Realm and that they by reason of the same are bound to serue their Prince and Soueraigne Lord for the 〈◊〉 being in his Wars for the defence of him and the land against euery rebellion power might raised reared against 〈◊〉 and with him to ●●er and abide in seruice in battell if ●ase so require and that 〈◊〉 the same service what fortune euer fall by chance in the same battel against the mind and will of the Prince as in this land sometime passed hath béen seen that it is not reasonable but against al laws reason good conscience that the said subjects going with their Soueraign Lord in Wars attending upon him in his person or being in other places by his cōmandement within this Land or without any thing should lose or forfeit for doing their duty or seruice of Allegiance It be therefore ordained enacted and established by the King our Soueraign by the advice and assent of his Lords Spirituall and Temporall and the Commons in this present Parliament assembled and by authority of the same that from hence forth no manner of person or persons whatsoeuer he or they be that attend upon the King and Soueraign Lord of this land for the time being in his person and do him true and faithfull seruice of Allegiance in the same or be in other places by his commandement in his wars within this land or without that for the said déed and true duty of Allegiance he or they be in no wise convict or attaint of high treason nor of other offences for that cause by Act of Parliament or otherwise by any processe of Law wherby he or any of them shal lose or forfeit life lands tenements rents possessions heriditaments goods chattels or any other things but to bee for that déed and service utterly dischar ged of any vexation trouble or loss And if any Act or Acts or other process of the Law hereafter thereupon for the same happen to be made contrary to this Ordinance that then that Act or Acts or other process of Law whatsoever they shall be shall bee utterly voyd Prouided alwaies that no person or persons shall take any benefit or aduantage by this Act which shall hereafter decline from his or their said Allegiance Cap. 24. In the Statute of 27. H. 8. It is enacted that no person or persons of what estate or degrée soever they be of shall haue any power or authority to pardon or remit any Treason Murders Man slaughters or any other Felonies c. but that the King shall haue the sole and whole power and authority thereof united knit to the Imperiall Crown as of right it appertaineth c. And in the same Statute it is enacted further That none shal haue power of what estate degrée or condition soeuer they be to make Iustices of Eyre Iustices of Assize Iustices of Peace c but all such Officers and Ministers shal be made by Letters-Pa●ents under the Kings great Seal in the name and by the authority of the King and his Heires Successors Kings of this Realm In the first ear of Queen Mary and the first Chapter It is enacted by the Quéen with the consent of the Lords Conmions That no déed or offence by act of Parliament made treason shall be taken deemed or adjudged to be ●igh Treason but only such as be declared and expressed to be Treason by the Act of Parliament made 25. Ed cap. 2. before mentioned A Declaration of Mr. David Jenkins now Prisoner in the Tower of London one of His Majesties Iudges in Wales for tryals of Treasons Murthers Felonies and all other capitall crimes that they ought only to be by Juries and not otherwise unless it be by Act of Parliament THe Common Law of this Land is that every Freeman is subject to a tryall by bill of Attainder in Parliament wherein His Majesty and both Houses must necessarily concur for that tryall and attainder is an Act of Parliament to which all men are subject to a Mag. Charta 19. 2 part inst fol 28 29.46 48 49 50. composed by Sir Ed. Cook and published by the Order of the House of Commons in May 1641. 4 pars instit fol. 41.356 No man shall otherwise be destroyed c. but by the lawfull judgement of his Peers or by the common Law of the Land Peeres to Noblemen are Noblemen Peeres to the Comōns are Knights Gen c. Judgement of peers referres to peers those words The Law of the Land refers to the Commons the Law of the Land is for the tryall of the life of a free Commoner by indictment presentment of good and lawfull men where the deed is done or by Writ originall of the common Law all this is declared in Magna Charta c. 29 and by 25 Ed. 3. c. 4.28 Ed. 3. c. 3.37 Ed. 3 c. 8.42 Ed. 3. c. 3. If the Lords wil try any man by an Ordinance they destroy that excellent Act of Magna Charta and all those other good Laws Sir Simon de Bereford a free Commoner of England was condemned by the Lords to death by an Ordinance which after the Lords better considering the matter that they might be acquitted of that sentence became suiters to the King that what they had done in future time might not be drawn into president because that which they had done was against the Law b Rot. Par. roul 4. ● 2 Num. 2. part inst p. 50 with this agrees Sir Iohn Lees case Rot. Par. 42. ● 3. Num. 22.23 2. inst f. 50. with this agrees the practise and usage of all times in this Land all the free Commoners of this Kingdome hath alwayes been tryed and acquitted or condemned in capitall causes by Iurers of their equals An Ordinance bindeth not in Law at all c See 4. p. inst f. 23.48.232.298.292 2. p. inst f. 47 48.157.643 4. H. 7. fa● 1. H. 7. f. 14.3 p. inst f. 41. and but pro tempore as the two Houses now affirme a man's life cannot be tried by that which is not binding and to continue for all times for a life lost cannot be restored By an Act of Parliament of the 1. 2. Phil●p and Mary c. 10. It is enacted that all trials for Treason hereafter to be had shall be according to the course of the Common Law and not otherwise If the crime charged upon any be Treason against the two Houses against the Parliament it caannot be for there is no Parliament without the King That is no Treason in Law as appeares by 25. Ed. 3. c. 2. 11. R. 2. c. 3. 1. H. 4. c. 10. 1. 2 Philip and Mary c. 10. 3. part of the Institutes page 23 An Act of Parliament to make any a Iudge where he is party is a void act d Dr Bonams case 8. part of Cooks Reports for none can be a Iudge and party in the
proceribus c. King charles being to have conforence and Treaty with his Prelates and Peeres carolus Rex cannot have colloquium et tractatum Conference and Treaty when he is deceased 2 H. 5. Cook title Parl. 3. pars and therefore it is as impossible for any Parliament to continue as long as they please as for a Parliament to make a dead man alive For Repugnancy That which is but for a time cannot be affirmed to have continuance for even it is repugnant The end of the Act 17 Caroli Regis which is to continue at pleasure is in the said act expressed to be to raise credit for Mony for these three purposes First for relief of his Majesties Army and People in the North. Secondly for preventing the imminent danger of the Kingdome Thirdly for supply of other his Majesties present and urgent occasions These ends are ended the relief of that Army the imminent danger supposed was six yeares ago● the supply of his Majesty hath been a supply against Him take away the end the meanes thereto are to no purpose Sir Anthony Maines case 5. pars 1. H. 4.6 Littl. cap. Villen take away the cause the effect ceaseth and therefore the three ends of this Act being determined it agreeth with Law and reason the Act should end the Law rejects things unprofitable and uselesse A perpetuall Parliament besides that it incites men to selfe-ends destructive of the publique of which the whole Kingdom hath had sufficient experience will be a constant charge to the Kingdom for that every County and Borough who send Members to the Parliament are by the Law to pay Wages to their Parliament-men which to many Counties will amount above some Subsidies yearly there are many poor Borough-Towns in each County of this Kingdom who being to maintain two Burgesses in Parliament will be quickly beggered if the Parliament have no end for all which reasons it is clear that such long continuance of Parliaments will instead of a remedy which is and ought to be the proper and true ends of Parliament become an insufferable Grievance and Oppression to all the People of the Land The Writ of Summons this Parliament is the Basis and Foundation of the Parliament If the foundation be destroyed the Parliament falls The Assembly of Parliament is for three purposes Rex est habiturus colloquium tractatum cum Praelatis magnatibus et proceribus super arduis negotijs concernentibus 1. nos 2. Defensionem regninostri 3. defensionem Ecclesi●●-Anglica nae This parliament hath overthrown this foundation in all three parts 1. Nos The King they have Chased him away and imprisoned him they have voted no prelates and that a number of other Lords about fourty in the City must not come to the House and about fourty more are out of Town the colloquium tractatus are made void thereby For the King cannot consult and treat there with men removed from thence 2. Defensionem regm●nostri that is gone they have made it their Kingdom not His for they have usurped all his Soveraignty 3. Defensionem Ecclesiae Anglican● that is gone that Ecclesia Anglicana must be understood necessarily that Church that at the test of the Writ was Ecclesia Anglicana they have destroyed that too So now these men would be called a Parliament having abated quashed and made nothing of the Writ whereby they were summoned and assembled If the Writ be made void All the Processe is void also that House must needs fal where the Foundation is overthrown Subla●o fundament● opus cadit the foundation being taken away the work fals is both a Maxime in Law and reason For some years past there is no crime from treason to trespass but they are guilty of all treasons Felonies Robberies Tresspasses are c●ntra pacem coronam dignitatem Regis against the Peace Crown and Dignity of the King as appeares by all Indictments in all Ages Pax Regis the Kings peace Corona Regis the Kings crown Dignitas Regis the Kings dignity are all trod under foot and made nothing Pax Regis the peace of the King is become a Warre against the King his Dignity put into Prison and the Crown put upon their owne heads All the Judges of England have resolved that Noble Men committing Treason have forfeited their office and Dignity Nevils case 7. part 34.2 Iac. their office is to councell the King in time of Peace to defend him in time of Warre and therefore those men against the duty and end of their Dignity taking not only councell but Armes also to destroy him and being thereof attaint by due course of Law By a tacit condition annexed to the estate of their dignity have forfited the same they are the words of the law and therefore they have made themselves incapable to be Members of the upper House The Oppressions of the People Briberies Extortions Monopolies ought to be inquired after by the House of Commons and complained of to the King and Lords What have they done The House of Commons cannot by the Law commit any man to prison who is not of the said House for Treason Murder or Fellony o● any thing but for the disturbance of the publique peace by the priviledge of the whole Body They have no power by the Writ which the King issueth to elect and returne Members of that house so to do For the Writ for them is onely ad faciendum consentiendum to those things where of his Majesty shal consult and treat with his Prelates and Nobles d● communi consilio regni shall be there ordained as appears by the Writ Here is no separate power given over the Kings people to them but only ad faciendum ●onsentiendum and in all times this ●●th beene expounded and restrained to that which concerned their own Members in relation to the publique Service 4. pars inst 23 24 25. as they are Members of the corporate Body of the Parliament where of the King is the Head But that the House of Commons have commited any man for Treason Murder or Felony or for any offence that had no relation to a Member of the House of Commons as it is against Law and reason so no instance can be given till this Parliament All Questions and Tryalls where witnesse are examined 19. H. 6.43.22 E 4.22.5 H. 4. c. 8.3 H. 6.46 the Examination is upon Oath by the Law by all our Books Statutes every dayes practice Examination without an Oath is but a loose discourse therefore the House of Commons not claiming power to give Oath have no power to examine any man No man shall be imprisoned by the King or his Councell 25. E. 3. c 4. Petition of Right 3 Car. unles it be by indictment presentment of his good and lawfull Neighbours where such deeds be done in due manner or by process made by Writ original at the Common Law this Statute rehearses Magna Charta p. 29. expounds
Session for publishing the Lord Cook his Bookes which Order they may find printed in the last Leafe of the second part of his Institutes in these words viz. Die Mercurii 12. May 1641. VPon Debate this Day in the Commons House of Parliament the said House did then desire held it fit that the heir of Sir Edward Cooke should publish in print the commentary upon Magna Charta the pleas of the Crown and the jurisdiction of Courts according to the intention of the said Sir Edward Cooke and that none but the Heir of the said Sir Edward Cooke or he that shall be authorized by him do presume to publish in print any of the foresaid Bookes or any Copy thereof H. Elsynge Cler. Dom. Com And I do further desire them that they would reade and peruse M. Solicitour Saint-Iohn and M. John Pym their Bookes published likewise this Session Whose Titles are as followeth viz. An Argument of Law concerning the ●ill of Attainder of High Treason of Thomas Earle of Strafford At a Conference in the Committee of both houses of Parliament By M. Saint John his Majesties Solicitor Generall Published by Order of the Commons House London Printed by G. M. for Jo. Bartlet At the Sign of the Guilt Cup neare S. Austins gate in Pauls Church yard 1641. And the Speech or Declaration of Iohn Pym Esquire After the Recapitulation or Summoning up of the charge of High Treason against Thomas Earle of Strafford 12 Aprill 1641. Published by the order of the Commons House London Printed for John Bartlet 1641. 1. Nothing is delivered for Law in my Books but what the H. of Commons have avowed to be Law in Bookes of Law published by their command this Session and agreeable to the Bookes of Law and Statutes of this Realme in all former Times and Ages 2. The supposed offence charged on me is against the two Houses and none ought to be judges and parties by the Law of this Land in their owne case 3. I desire the benefit of Magna Charta the Petition of right other good Lawes of this Land which ordaine that all mens Tryals should be by the established Lawes and not otherwise they are the very words of the petition of Right An Ordinance of both Houses is no Law of the Land 1 Part. col of Ordinances fol 728 2 Pars iust fol 47 48 157 143 4 par instit 23 232 298 4 H 7 18 by their own confession and by the Bookes of the Lord Cooke published by their Order as aforesaid this Session in six several places For Sedition in my Books there is none but such as they have authorised this Session to be published printed To publish the Law is no sedition These Positions following I doe set downe for the Law of the Land in my books and they themselves have justified and avowed them as aforesaid we agree the Law to be and to have been in all times in all the particulars following as here ensueth 3 Part instit pag 12 M Sollicitor Pag. 12 3 part instit pag 9 M Pym p. 28 3 part instit 3 10 12 16 3 part instit pag 9 M Sollicitor p 0 10 136 M Sollicitor pag 9 M Sollicitor pag 9 M Sollicitor pag 23 4 pars 4 inst● p 125 Iustice Huttons argument fol. 39 40 4 part instit 2 part instit articul super chartas cap. 5 1. To imprison the King is high treason 2 To remove Councellours from the King by force is High Treason 3. To alter the establisht Lawes in any part by force is High Treason 4. To usurp the Royall Power is High Treason 5. To alter the Religion establisht is High Treason 6. To raise rumours and give out words to alienate the peoples affections from the King is High Treason 7. To sesse Souldiers upon the people of the Kingdome without their consent is High Treason 8. The execution of paper orders by Souldiers in a military way is high Treason 9 To coanterfeit the great Seale is High Treason 10. The Commission of Array is in force and none other 11. None can make Judges Justices Sheriffes c. but the King The King makes every Court 12. The great Seale belongs to the Kings Custody or to whome he shall appoint and none other 13. 1 part Coll. of Ordin Cook ut● supra 4 part● inst 25. Ordinances of one or both Houses are noe lawes to binde the people 14. No priviledge of Parliament holds for Treason Felony or br●ach of the Peace not for 20. Parliament-men forty nor three hundred 15. M. Solicitor pag. 8.70 M. Solicitor pag. 12.27 M. Solicitor pag. 26. M. Solicitor pag. 35. To subvert the fundamentall lawes is High Treason 16 To levey War against the person of the King is High Treason 17. To perswade Forreiners to levey war within this Kingdome is High Treason 18 To impose unlawfull Taxes to impose new Oathes M. Pym p. 8. is High Treason 19. The King can doe no wrong 20. M. Pym p. ●7 It is a pernitious Doctrine to teach Subjects they may be discharged from the oath of Allegience M. Pym p. 24. Then what means the Doctrin of both Houses of the Votes 11 of Feb. 1647. 21. A necessity of a mans own making doth not excuse him 3. parr inst pag. 9 The requiring forcing of the Militia brought the necessity of arming upon the Houses 22. None can leavy war within this realme without authority from the King for to him only it belongeth to levy war by the common law of the land to doe otherwise is high Treason by the said Common law The only quarrel was is the Militia for which so much blood hath been spent M. Solicitor 70.71 4. part inst pag. 1.3.4 4. pars inst 41.356 and Treasure 23. No Parliament without the King he is Principium caput finis 24. Presentment or tryall by Jury is the bright-right of the Subject There is no doubt but that many in both Houses are free from this great sin and that most of the prevailing party had at first no intentions to proceed so farre but the madnesse of the People who are very vnstable and so they will find them and the successe of their Armies having this great rich City to supply them with all accomodations have so elated them that the evil is come to this height For my selfe to put me to death in this cause is the greatest honour I can possibly receive in this World Dulce decorum est mori pro partia And for a Lawyer and a Judge of the Law to die dum sanctis patria legibus obsequitur for obedience to the Lawes will be deemed by the good men of this Time a sweet smelling sacrifice and by this and future Times that I dyed full of yeares and had an honest and an honourable end And posterity will take knowledge of these Men who put some to death for subverting of the Lawes and others for supporting of them c. Yet mercy is above all the ●orkes of God Bracton l c. 9 p 107 4 pars inst 342 343 Stanford 99 The King is Gods V●car●on earth In Bracton who was a Judge in Henry 3. time you shall ●●nd the Kings oath To shew mercy is part of it You are all his children say and doe what you will you are all his Subjects and He is your King and parent Pro magno peccato paululum supplicii satis est patri and therefore let not the prevailing party be obdurate out of a desperation of safety That which is past is not revocable Take to your thoughts your parents your wives your children your friends your fortunes your countrey wherein Forreigners write there is Mira aeris suavitas rerum omnium abundantia Invite not them hither the only way to be free of their company will be To restore his Majesty and receive from Him an Act of Oblivion a generall pardon Assurance for the Arreares of the Souldiery and meet satisfaction to tender consciences God preserve the King and the Lawes DAVID JENKINS Prisoner in New-gate